Today’s service is led by the Revd Andy Braunston
Call to Worship
Listen, hear the sound of the trumpets and the song of the angels!
The feast is ready; Jesus is here to welcome us.
See the overladen tables, taste the peace and joy.
The feast is ready; Jesus is here to welcome us.
Here is food for the hungry, riches for the poor and paradise for those who follow.
The feast is ready; Jesus is here to welcome us.
Hymn The Trumpets Sound, The Angels Sing
Graham Kendrick © Make Way Music Ltd 1989 sung by the Early Worship Ensemble of the Lutheran Church of Honolulu and used with their kind permission.
The trumpets sound,
the angels sing,
the feast is ready to begin.
The gates of heav’n
are open wide
and Jesus welcomes you inside.
Sing with thankfulness
songs of pure delight.
Come and revel
in heaven’s love and light.
Take your place
at the table of the King.
The feast is ready to begin.
The feast is ready to begin.
Tables are laden
with good things
O taste the peace
and joy He brings!
He’ll fill you up with love divine.
He’ll turn your water into wine.
The hungry heart
He satisfies;
offers the poor His paradise.
Now hear all heav’n
and earth applaud
the amazing goodness
of the Lord.
Prayers of Approach, Confession & Forgiveness
Long ago, Eternal Majesty, You called Abram and Sarah to follow You,
to leave their home, their family, and all that was known and secure;
we thank You for their faith.
At night, Embodied Word, Nicodemus came and spoke with You,
seeking to understand the demands You make,
yet not quite risking the commitment; we understand his reluctance.
In our time, Enlivening Spirit, You call us to leave our complacency,
to see our world as it really is,
and, through the simple things of bread and wine, You transform us.
Help us, Eternal One, to hear and respond to Your insistent call.
Forgive us when we hear but don’t follow,
when we turn our ears to other sounds;
when the silent music of Your praise is overcome with our own noise.
Forgive us when we refuse to analyse the ills of our world,
and when we use complexity as an excuse to do nothing.
Forgive us, O God, and give us time to change. Amen.
Hear, O people, good news! Whilst we are still far off, God runs to embrace and welcome us home. Know you are forgiven, know you are given time to change; know you must forgive others and find the courage to forgive yourself. Amen.
Prayer of Illumination
Bless with Your Spirit, O God, our flesh, that as we hear Your voice in word – read and proclaimed – we may hear anew Your call to us. Amen.
Reading Genesis 12:1-4a
Now the LORD said to Abram, “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” So Abram went, as the LORD had told him; and Lot went with him.
Hymn Deep In the Shadows of the Past
The Rev’d Brian Wren © 1975, 1995 Hope Publishing Company, 380 S Main Pl, Carol Stream, IL sung by Adam and Gillian Earle
Deep in the shadows of the past,
far out from settled lands,
some nomads travelled
with their God
across the desert sands.
The dawning hope of humankind
by them was sensed and shown:
a promise calling them ahead,
a future yet unknown.
While others bowed
to changeless gods
they met a mystery,
invisible, without a name:
“I AM WHAT I WILL BE”;
and by their tents,
around their fires
in story, song and law,
they praised, remembered,
handed on
a past that promised more.
From Exodus to Pentecost
the promise changed and grew,
while some, remembering the past,
recorded what they knew,
or with their letters and laments,
their prophecy and praise,
recovered, kindled and expressed
new hope for changing days.
For all the writings that survived
for leaders, long ago,
who sifted, copied, and preserved
the Bible that we know,
give thanks, and find its story yet
our promise, strength and call,
the model of emerging faith,
alive with hope for all.
Now I’m not suggesting we return to this Early Church practice but maybe there are things we can learn from it.
First, the Earliest Christians knew how to critique their society. Perhaps this was a gift from their Jewish members who saw the Roman Empire from the unique vantage point of the ever vanquished race rightly suspicious of imperial policies. Whatever the reason, the earliest Church believed life was sacred and babies could not be left for dead, that sexual relationships needed to be committed and based on love not lust. They believed that children, and women, and slaves had worth – those household commands are much stricter on men than they are on women, slaves, and children. Like their Jewish forebears and coreligionists the earliest Christians knew that only God was to be worshipped; the emperor was to be prayed for but not venerated. Pagan worship, no matter how exotic or sensual, detracted from the truth that there is only one God; the only one we worship. By having women leaders of churches – some of these earliest churches met in the homes of richer independent women who, we assume, also led the community – the earliest Church was incredibly counter cultural in a deeply patriarchal age. How good are we, I wonder, at critiquing our own society. It’s hard as we see things as normal; debt is as crucial to our society as slavery was to the Roman world, we’re confused about sexual ethics, our various identities which we assert are both useful and confusing – they strengthen and divide us. We see military might as the only way to provide security – and events in Ukraine make a pacifist position more difficult to sustain. We still live in economic models which always need growth and exploitation of our planet.
Secondly, conversion and baptism marked not only an inner faith, an intellectual commitment to Christ but also a radical change – symbolised not only by the affirmation of faith but by stepping from the waters of new birth as naked as the day one was born.. That change meant living differently, withdrawing from pagan worship and practice, not leaving babies to die, not beating one’s slaves, remaining faithful. More than this, however, the radical change that was expected had to be vouched for and it was expected that the church would raise concerns if someone’s conversion hadn’t progressed as it should or if the would-be convert was still stuck in old ways. We have tended to see conversion as an inner spiritual reality; we might be very interested in how the person understands, intellectually, the Christian faith but less concerned with the radical nature of the commitment – after all we might not be living radical lives ourselves!
Thirdly, Communion wasn’t a sacrament where all were welcome! Church, itself, was a place of welcome but Communion was seen as special – not so special it couldn’t be celebrated each week – but reserved to the baptised. Here the Lord fed His people. Here the simple things of bread and wine – soon divorced from the rest of the meal due to growing numbers – were given greater significance and were seen as signs which, at the very least, pointed to Christ present in their midst. This meal was only for the baptised who valued it all the more – fragments of bread were taken to the sick who were unable to join the service. We tend to see Communion as special – which is why we most often limit its celebration but we struggle to articulate why Communion is special, what does, or doesn’t happen at Communion and we wouldn’t dream of telling someone they can’t receive.
Of course over Church history various attempts have been made to get back to these early practices. Making membership criteria more demanding always risks the elect becoming rather sanctimonious. Critiquing the world can soon become petty and focused on secondary issues – Jeanette Winterton’s Oranges Aren’t the Only Fruit memorably portrayed a sect like church in northern England were dancing, make-up and pop music were all seen as worldly evils to be avoided but where narrow minded judgmentalism wasn’t. But if we are to move on from a vague understanding of mission to something where we see God is passionate about our worship, our evangelism, our service of others and our witness to the Gospel we need to take membership more seriously. We need to re-learn what it is to be radical, how to critique our society, how to work together to change it and to see, in Church Meeting, a key building block for the mutual accountability that is needed.
We may not dismiss the unbaptised before communion, we may not name the sins of those who’d like to join, we may not insist on such radical baptismal promises but we need, and need soon, to see our world as it is, to learn to critique it, and ourselves, that we may be better signs of the Kingdom which we long to come. Will you pray with me?
God of the Church, we ask you to bless us in our time,
that we may learn from how you led the Church of old,
and how you lead us now.
Help us to be better disciples, to critique our society,
and to love it enough to want to change it for the better,
that through our lives, your light and love might shine through. Amen.
Hymn Beyond these Walls of Worship
© Ian Worsfold and Paul Wood performed by Ruth and Joy Everingham and used with their kind permission.
Beyond these walls of worship in the stress and joy of life,
can we offer you our bodies as a living sacrifice?
Will we keep you at the centre far beyond the Sunday call?
We’ll return to you, be transformed by you; still declare you God of all?
Beyond these walls of worship, in the times of work and rest,
will we display your love for all when are faith’s put to the test?
When the people that surround us deny that you are there,
will we display our faith in you. In life, in praise, in prayer?
Beyond the walls of worship may your spirit strengthen us
to make the whole of life our worship as we witness to your love.
From this hour in your presence send us out now to proclaim
that will live our life as a sacrifice to the glory of your name.
(pause)
O God, Fire of Love,
we pray for those preparing for baptism this Easter,
that they may see the world as it is,
clearly see what they renounce and affirm,
that the Church, ever young, will be renewed
and our world changed.
Help us, in our congregation, O God,
to give a firmer witness and to live a deeper discipleship.
In a moment’s silence, O God of all compassion,
we remember those we love and worry about, and our own needs
(longer pause)
Accept, Loving One, all our prayers as we pray as our Saviour taught us,
Our Father…
Hymn O God of Bethel
Philip Doddrige sung by the choir of Troon Old Parish Church and used with their kind permission.
O God of Bethel, by whose hand
thy people still are fed,
who through this earthly pilgrimage
hast all our forebears led;
Our vows, our prayers,
we now present
before thy throne of grace;
God of our forebears, be the God
of their succeeding race.
Through each
perplexing path of life
our wandering footsteps guide;
give us each day our daily bread,
and raiment fit provide.
O spread thy covering
wings around
till all our wanderings cease,
and at our Father’s loved abode
our souls arrive in peace.
Such blessings from
thy gracious hand
our humble prayers implore;
and thou shalt be our chosen God,
and portion evermore.
Holy Communion
The Lord be with you: and also with you.
Lift up your hearts: we lift them to the Lord.
Let us give thanks to the Lord our God:
It is right to give God thanks and praise.
It is right and good, O Most High, to give you our thanks and praise,
for you have called us to be Your Church,
to shine as a light to the nations, to embody Your love, liberty, and life.
Through the waters of baptism,
You call us to live lives worthy of our calling,
to be signs of contradiction to the values of our world,
and to encourage each other to the ways of holiness.
Around this table You meet and nurture Your people, with Your very self.
Through the mystery of this bread and wine You lift us into your presence
and so with the choirs of angels in heaven,
and with all Your creation we sing to Your praise and glory:
Ash Grove Sanctus
The Rev’d Michael Forster (b1946) © Kevin Mayhew Ltd 1995 sung by Lucy Bunce
Our Lord Jesus Christ, on the night, in which he was betrayed,
took bread and when he had given thanks to you, O Most High,
broke it and gave it to his disciples, saying: Take, eat; this is my body, which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.
The same way after supper, he took the cup and when he had given thanks, he gave it to them and saying: Drink this, all of you; this is my blood of the new covenant, which is shed for you and for many for the forgiveness of sins. Do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.
Lord Jesus, we commemorate your death on the Cross,
we celebrate your resurrection and we await your coming.
Eternal God, let your Holy Spirit move in power over us
and over these earthly gifts of bread and wine,
that they may be the communion of the body and blood of Christ,
and that we may become one in him.
May his coming in glory find us ever watchful in prayer,
strong in truth and love, and faithful in the breaking of the bread.
Then, at last, all peoples will be free, all divisions healed,
and with your whole creation, we will sing your praise,
through your Son, Jesus Christ.
Through Christ, with Christ, in Christ,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit, all glory and honour are yours,
almighty Majesty, for ever and ever. Amen
To prepare to fed by the Lord’s own hand we sing the Lamb of God:
Lamb of God (Ar hyd y nos)
Nick Fawcett © 2008 Kevin Mayhew Ltd, sung by Lucy Bunce
Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world.
In Your mercy, come and heal us; Lord hear our prayer.
Take away our sins, forgive us, Lamb of God restore, redeem us,
grant us peace, Lord, in Your mercy, Lord hear our prayer.
The gifts of God are given for God’s people.
Eat and drink in God’s presence;
rejoice in food for your souls and rest for your bodies.
The body and blood of Christ are given for you!
Music for Communion
Break Thou The Bread of Life
by Mary Lathbury sung by students at Mansfield College in c1991
Post Communion Prayer
Having now by faith received the sacrament of the Body and Blood of Christ, let us give thanks:
Merciful God of all creation,
holy Parent of all people through our Lord Jesus Christ
who united all things in His fullness,
we join Your whole creation in exultant praise
of Your bountiful goodness.
You have now touched us with new life
and filled us with new hope
that Your reign will come,
that the hungry will be fed,
that the oppressed will be set free from evil,
that Your reconciling work will be done,
that love and faithfulness meet together,
that justice and peace will kiss each other
and the whole creation filled with your glory.
Blessing, glory, wisdom, thanksgiving, honour, power, and might,
be unto our God, for ever and ever. Amen
Hymn Called By Christ To Be Disciples
Martin Leckebusch (b. 1962)
© 1999, Kevin Mayhew Ltd, Buxhall, Stowmarket, Suffolk BBC Songs of Praise
Called by Christ to be disciples
every day in every place,
we are not to hide as hermits
but to spread the way of grace;
citizens of heaven’s kingdom,
though this world is where we live,
as we serve a faithful Master,
faithful service may we give.
Richly varied are our pathways,
many callings we pursue:
may we use our gifts and talents
always, Lord, to honour you;
so in government or commerce,
college, hospice, farm or home,
whether volunteers or earning,
may we see your kingdom come.
Hard decisions may confront us,
urging us to compromise;
still obedience is our watchword —
make us strong and make us wise!
Secular is turned to sacred,
made a precious offering,
as our daily lives are fashioned
in submission to our King.
Blessing
The peace of God which passes all human understanding,
keep your hearts and minds in the knowledge and love of God,
and of God’s Son, Jesus Christ,
and the blessing of Almighty God,
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,
be with you and all whom you love,
now and always, Amen.
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